Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
Junior Stu€y Club © For Girls Organized .& study club for girls was organized under the direction of Mrs. Alfred Zuger at a meeting held last evening at the Business and Professional ‘Women's club rooms. “The Four Leaf Clover” was the name chosen for the club, and mem- bership is made up mostly of girls from out of town, who are attending high school or one of the business yecolleges in the city. Officers were clected, Mildred Quam, president; Ethel Schoen, vice president; Katherine Gross, recording secretary, Opal Berg, corresponding secretary; and Ann ‘Kroise, treasurer. A brief business meeting was held and committees ap- Pointed. Stella Moki, Ethel Schoen and Ger- trude Peterman compose the commit- tee on constitution and by-laws; and Laverne Joersz and Isabelle and Evelyn Jahnke were chosen as the program committee. During the meeting it was decided to include in the course of study for the coming year works on travel and foreign affairs. Some of the pro- grams will also be devoted to the fine arts. By special request of those present it was agreed to add several girls to the charter membership at the next meeting, which will be April 29. Those present at the meeting last evening were Ann Kraise, Ann Ines, Stella Moki, Ethel Schoen, Florence Josephson, Edna Josephson, Gertrude Peterman, Mildred Quam, Opal Berg, Evelyn Jahnke, Isabelle Jahnke, La- verne Jersz, and Katherine Gross. Junior club membership is a new department of the state Federation of Women’s clubs, added with the purpose of interesting teen age girls in the work &nd ideals of the national féderation. This is the second club to be organized by Mrs. Zuger since her appointment as state chairman of junior membership last month. ** & Kolberg Chooses High School Debate Team Theodore Psilolihnos, Tolliver, and Virgil Luyben have bec ’ named members of the Bismarck high school debating team for the re- mainder of the scason by O. W. Kol- berg, coach. including Two teams represented the school | *@h the tournament but the school is entitled to use cnly one team in fu- ture contests. The Bismarci: debaters clash with a trio from Dickinson high school at the local high school auditorium at 7:30 p. m. Friday in the quarter-final round of the state championship ser- ies. The winner of the Friday debate will compete in the semifinal round, the winners of which meet in the final round at the University of North Dakota during Pele May Conference. * , «Mrs. O’Hare Hostess To Chapter F, P. I. O. Members of Chapter F, of the P. E. ©. Sisterhood were entertained yes- terday afternoon at the home of Mrs. H. F. O'Hare. Mrs. W. 8. Nuessle, vice president, presided in the absence of the presi- dent, Mrs. J. P. French, who is at-/| tending the Rotary convention in Minot. Following the business meeting. Mrs. O'Hare gave reminiscences of her recent trip to Washington, D. C., recounting some of the most interest- ing incidents. x ** Mrs. C. F. Dirlam Is ed There were guests for five tables when Mrs, C. F. Dirlam entertained at bridge at her home lasi evening. }High score in the evening's bridge games were won by Miss Hildor Si- i: wnson and Mrs, J. L. Mullin. donquils used on the tabies helped to.carry out an attractive yellow color cchome, when @ two course luncheon was served at the conclusion of the games. Assisting Mrs. Dirlam were Mrs. A..H. Barrett and Mrs. G. Personius. x * * Mrs, H. F. O'Hare entertained the members of her bridge club and their husbands at a bridg2 dinner at her. home Friday evening. High scores in the games were won by Mrs. . Lahr anes john A. Larson. * * § Fie fourth division of the Ladies ‘Aid society of the McCabe Methodist church will be hostesses at the regu- lar monthly meeting of the General Aid society in the church parlors Thursday afternoon. All ladies of the congregaien ig invited, * Miss Ada Ahrens, who has recently completed a term of school at Zee- lend, was a guest of her sister, Miss Mabel Ahreng, for a few days. Miss Ahrens left this morning for her home at Lidgerwood. ss s* ‘The initiatory degree team of! the Be Molay lodge will confer the first degree, and other important business be transacted at the mecting Masonic temple. rs * * * ‘A cordial invitation is extended to the public to attend the recital of the voice pupils of Mrs. Hermann Schef- Catherine | Hostess at Bridge| Women’s Club Gives Dinner for Husbands Members of the Women's club en- tertained their husbands at their an- nual party Saturday evening at the home of Mrs. A. Y. Haglund The affair took the form of a bridge dinner, and places were marked for 24 at the tables where a color scheme |of pink and green was carried out with pink tulips centering the tables. 1 For the bridge games six tables were in play, honors going to Mrs. H, F. Keller and C. E. Pickles, and to Mrs. C. E. Pickles and L. V. Miller. se & Mrs. Bingenheimer Is Guest of Chapter F Mrs. Margaret Bingenheimer, Man- dan, state organizer for the P. E. O. Sisterhood, was a guest of Chapter N, P. E. O., last cvening at their meeting in the home of Mrs. Arthur V. Soren- son. Following the busthess meeting, and model initiation, Mrs. Bingenheimer spoke, commending the chapter for the progress they have made during the past year, and offering sugges- tions regarding the meetings. Chap- ter N is one of the newest chapters of the Sisterhood in the state, having been organized just one year ago. For the evening's program a paper on “The Characterizations of Oriental Music” was given by Miss Amy Fahl- Gren. Ofiental music was described as being lacking in harmonic cevelop- ment according to Western standards. This was accounted for in part ty their use of quarter, eighth and even sixteenth tones and the types of in- struments employed by them. Music of India and China and their musical instruments were stressed. Mrs. Sorenson served a refreshment ccurse at the close of the evening. ee * Paul Cook Active in ' Campus Activities Paul Cook, son of Mrs. W. M. Cook, Bismarck, besides being the leading golfer at the North Daketa agricul- {tural college, is becoming active in campus attivitics. He recently was initiated into active membership and elected secretary by Alpha Kappa Phi, social fraternity, | was elected to active membership of the Writers’ club, and was named treasurer of the Newman club on the campus. Cook plays golf daily at Fargo, planning to make a determined bid for the state championship in the totirnament to be conducted at Devils Lake in August. * oe Dr. Griebenow Back From European Trip Dr. F. F. Griebenow. who has spent the past five months in post- graduate work in European clinics, returned to Bismarck Sunday. Dr. Griebenow, a specialist in skin diseases, devoted much of h': time to a study of methods of treatment used in the clinics of Vienna, later continuing his studies in Germany and France. Several weeks were spent in visitin: points of interest on the continent. es * * As this week is national “Yard and Garden Week,” much of the meeting of the Bismarck Garden club last eve- ning was devoted io a discussion of the benefits of the yard and garden contest being sponsored locally by the @lub. A number of valuable booklets on phases of gardening were pre- sented the members by Worth Lumry, and Mrs. J. B. Sinith donated holly- hock. seeds to b2 distributed. Plans for jediting an issue of one of the local {papers were fcrmulated. x * * A dance to which the public is in- vited will be given Thursday evening at the A. O. U. W. hall by the Sons {and Daughters of NORA: * * Miss Helen Yeager, who was the guest of Miss Adeline Christ over the week-end, left today for her home at Jamestown. * * * 8t. George's Guild will meet with ‘rs, H. E, Shearn, 213 Second strect, Thursday afternoon at 3 o'clock. *s * * Mrs. M. J. Cullen will be hostess to the Sunshine sociey at a niu..o.t Wednesday afternoon at 12:45. You and your fricnds are cordially. invited to attead a recital by pupils from Mrs. Scheffer’s class at the auditor- ium, Friday, April 19, at 8:15 p.m. Princess Patt Coffee. A royal drink. Baby Not Gaining? Look to His Digestion Bables can't gain when souring waste in a clogged digestive tract is forming gas, making them colicky, constipated and miscrable. Just try the method docters endorse, and mil- your baby improves. A few drops of purely-vegetable, harmless Fletcher's Castoria makes the most ftetful, fev+ erish baby or child comfortable in a jiffy. A few doses and he’s digesting perfectly and gaining as he should. To get genuine Castoria, look for the will | metcher signature on the wrapper..— Adv. THE RISMARCK TRIBUNE i know. You just ought to hear ki le Gugenheim | YOUR CHILDREN ty, Dine Roberts Barton ServiceIne “Dorothy doesn’t play with toys,” complained her mother. “You re- member how we played, don’t you, Dot? We were forever hunting up Patches and dressing dolls. Why, if we'd had one of those little sewing machines that I gave Dorothy for lished in England ij Ho! Imitators, Eh? Reported i 14,390, an increase of “Bay, sister dear, I.don't know @ po Married thing about kids, but it seems to me T've heard that when they're four or five they are perfect monkeys to imitate. How can you expect her to make doll dresses, when you buy every rag that comes into your house? How can you think she’s going to love cooking when you never go near the kitchen? “She docs, what she sees you do. That's the way ell children play.” But Dorothy's mother just stared. New York, April 16.—(7)—The New York World said today that Natalie Guggenheim, 18, only daughter of Edmond A. Guggenheim, wealthy copper magnate, has married Thomas E. Gorman, a young real ¢state and insurance broker and son of a rail- road freight agent. ‘The marriage Vcense ' issued “I believs,” sho nodded finally. “that |two weeks ago by the town clerk at her birthday, I believe we'd have goné| you just said sométhing. And we|North Hempstead, Long Island, and, _ By neglecting constipation body two tableepsontele defly-ckironie mad with Joy. : biame the children.” the World said according to reilable Beane a 4, a, Seat a cae, ee ronda Peake ce be “Yet I doubt if she's touched it —_——___ information the couple were married | Headaches, Iisticssneen, clendy bed me eg arcky after she'd had it three days. And State Basketball by @ Lutheran minister either Friday | Comp! lowed by Seeasis, Ube: in cooking--recipes even then I think I played with it or Saturday. rigid Nes ruin ai are on the package. more than she did. got out mend) Tournament Profit |, Corman ts about 28 years old. When | and steal beauty. | Don't : in est i nearly all of it. It was more fun than Greater This Year | insurance business he assisted his nar an cate Shee ipa- in oosine N in fay erbstte.” father, Patrick Gorman, handling | tion with &, simple remedy —- & Sewing? Well, No! Receipts at the state basketball | freight at the Long, ee where i telous —100% been—that by ia a few 9 if al “You never use it, do you? I be-|tournament at the state training station at Port Wash ys “| brings sure, from : lieve T never saw it.” school at Mandan last month totaled | cuggennelm's maintain ® PALALAL) Ghig ‘widespread OK \~ "Doctors 2, AN ENAMELED aceite, painted in.“ d ALL-BRAN beeguse it : ta Lente Oh heals ed the modern manner, distinguishes | 2t's mahogany console I keep a one of the new vanity ie ate the foot of my bed, but I hate sew- home. Mra, Guggenheim would not eon- firm nor deny the marriage and Mr. Guggenheim at White Sulphur Springs, Va., said he knew pe ed about it. ‘At the Gorman homé, @ modest dwelling in Port Washington, Mrs. Gorman said she knew a license had been taken out but professed to know nothing about the marriage. She said her son was spending the evening with friends. Natalie was at the home of her parents. $3,050.25, it was announced today by J. C. Gould, superintendent of Man- dan schools and secretary of the state high school athletic league. A profit of $810.88 has been turned ing now. I hardly ever open it.” “Well, what other toys doesn’t our august niece approve of?” asked Dot. “Let me see. I bought her a com- plete kitchen sct one day. I wish you could see the stove. Come on up and TU show it to you. Mind you, its got electric burnérs! And there are all sorts of kettles and sauce pans and ieving pans for (reaas | mn ete but PEK children | he never touches it. Now when we 1 ra eee et tian tor a | were little, you know very well we'd visit of six weeks with relatives of | have adored it so, we'd have taken |, Mr. Koetke. the whole works to bed with us, I can’t understand that child—when Mrs, Lawrence Mercer, daughter of | We were 80 domestic.” : Mr. and Mrs, W. H. Seitz, underwent | “What else? & mastoid operation yesterday at the Strange Child Mandan Deaconess hospital. “Um! Why—well, just everything. She scorned the sight of the laundry set mother sent her. Washtubs, wringer, boiler, washboard, clothes- pins and line—most complete outfit you ever saw. I don't think she even Personal and Social News of | Mandan Vicinity es over to L. A. White, superintendent of Minot schools and treasurer of the league. Receipts were $25 less than those for the 1928 tournament, but profits were greater. The net profit of the 1928 tournament was $790.38, Mr. Gould says. — Mrs. Carl Bloomberg returned Sa‘ urday from Glendive, Mont., whe she has been with Mr. Bloontber, who is @ patient in the Northern P: lions of mothers know, and sce how J cific hospital there. looked at the whole ensemble once. T'll bet if I'd buy her one of those A dinner honoring her daughter.| miniature electric washers ghe would- Leuise, who was celebr.ting her six- jook at it, either. Some child!” teenth birthday, was give: Sunday ‘What does she like?” evening by Mrs. L. B. Lyman. There Vell—she has one doll that has a were guests for four tables, and after | whole wardrobe full of clothes. She dinner bridge was played. High|dresses her to go shopping, and scores went to Harries Rosen and) dresses her for golf and for tennis Lewista Hanley. bai cae ee ied be She has the dolls give bridge parties and has ‘The marriage of Miss Edna Grace. /them call in the toy Rolls Royce and and W. A. Lang, both oi Flasher, took | take each other riding. It’s simply place Monday afternoon at the Pre: ons How she learned the lingo byterian manse, Rev. G. W. Stewart reading the ceremony. Attending the couple were Mr. and Mrs. Fred Pot- ter, Flasher. ifr. Lang is manager of the Farmers’ Elevator at Flasher. —————— ¢ | City-County Briefs | te ee ° Fon P. D. Norton, Minot, former representative in Congress, is in the city on a business trip. i THEATRE Henry Redke, of Jamestown, a Phil- ippine war veteran, stopped off here between trains, Monday evening, to sce foreign war veterans with whom he served overseas. * Tonight Also Wed. and Thurs. WILLIAMPOWELL, JAMES HALL LOUISE BROOKS — JEAN ARTHUR Venegeance? Fear? Jealousy? Robbery? What caused the mur- der of Broadway's most alluring and coldly ambitious showgirl? “Find the motive and you solve the mystery of this baffling erime,” says Philo Vance, suave, fascinating, amazingly keen detective. You'll live this tense drama as S. S. Van Dine's famous chatacter pieces together the baffling circumstances. Millions enjoyed the beck. You'll enjoy the picture. ALSO COMEDY AND NEWS SS Princess Patt Coffee. A spe- cial blend of several fine cof- fees, each roasted to the degree that brings out its best flavor. | ‘Foot Saver’ Shoes. A. ‘V. Lucas Co. Notice: Rich black earth for sale. Wachter Transfer Co., phone 62. a PAGES 138-9 ao22 THIS WEER’S SATURDAY EVENING POST 2244224424 Wateh fer Our Ad in Monday's Rismarck Tribune Hear the roar of the ava- lanche—the thunder of the White Horse Rapids— . Just two of the 1001 thrills April 22nd. in this epic sound produc- tion of the great Klondike Montana-Dakota Gold Rush! Don’t miss it! Power Co. SR Se a” 2 oe Se SE The peace of mind that goes with dependable pro- tection more than compen- sates for the premium paid. For Reliable Insurance Let Le Barron _ Insure It Office. 312 1-2 Brosdway Phone 616-4 Bismarck, N D. The Greatest Picture Since “The Spoilers” GEORGE LYONS In Movietone Vaudeville Performances: 7:15 and 9 p. m. Adults 50c - Children 25¢ Photo by Willd Mellyweid Pree George Fitsmaurice thus sums up the experience of 39 Hollywood directors. “A amooth shin is a supreme necessity to a ecreen star,” he says. “Under the merciless test of the close-up, make-up is next to useless. The shin an ©. Qomt af 10 screen stars use ie ‘eel saust bo rarely lovely." ———-~ | LUX Toilet Soap New books and new editions pub- over 1937, Braille, the of books To Insurance Man} Brae: the system of printing BODY POISON About 45,000 are was in- | city annually, is o bulk Tt sweeps testines elean of poisonous and stimulates normal action. Results are guérantesd. Just eat Another - bhigd ~, “ A MACK SENNETT COMEDY With 1001 Big Laughs MATINEE TODAY pperiactiiesnsce — gl By DUCIA AND See== "0 weowesar Pm iting KEREKJARTO \ Irene Rich in the charming ad one of thé most luxurious eeen in Hollywood —which so well expresses her lovely “Luz Toilet Soap gives the skia'es truly beautiful a smoothness as any of the finest Freach soaps do.” home Teil “Smooth skin captivates,” says George Fitzmaurice, FIRST NATIONAL director vented by Louis Braille, a blind 1028 totaled | cian of Paris, just a century ag. eae § MENACE HEALTH Kellogg’s ALL-BRAN Will Rid Your System of Them ALL-BRAN ESTELLE, PALACE WED. - THURS. FRI. NIGHTS LIGHTS OF NEW YORK ‘